Stargazer in Fairfax is doing 39 things including…

Make money blogging

2 cheers

 

Stargazer has written 5 entries about this goal

Ack! Half of January is over... 3 years ago

I’m working on a project that’s nearly done but haven’t forgotten this, my main goal. I need to make money from having something online, preferrably a blog.

I’ve already started pointing people to my webpage as much as possible. Mostly people from gaming forums I’m on, etc. It’s sorely in need of a redesign, but it is what it is right now. Stop by! www.sunnypad.com

Here are my ideas:

Non-blog:
1. Make a top-100 list. List of games, list of technical tools, something like that. Pop some ads on it and get the list out there to start generating some revenue.

Blog ideas:
I’ve had two blog ideas. Would appreciate feedback on which are better ideas:
1. A regular ol’ technical blog. Pros: people like them. I do. Cons: there are a bazillion of them out there. What will make people want to come back to mine regularly?
2. A knowledge-type of blog. Kind of a learn-with-me thing. I take a subject that I don’t know anything about and just start learning about it and blogging. Anyone interested can learn along with me.

Problems with blogging: People like me use news aggregators. I only go into the blog entries if they hold my interest or have more information that I want to see. People that skim links in an aggregator won’t bring in revenue for me.

Another thing – what will make someone want to read my blog? I have a bazillion feeds in my aggregator. But which blogs make me want to rush to them first? Also there’s not enough time in the day sometimes…even the things I’m dying to keep up with, I just can’t. So the updates are piled up in my newsreader. I’m sure I’m not the only one having this issue.

Things to think about and tackle.



Akismet 3 years ago

For anti-spam (a HUGE problem I’ve had on my personal Wordpress blog, which I actually stopped using because it was so time consuming cleaning out all the spam) someone suggested that Akismet http://akismet.com/ is great. I plan on installing this on any future blog.



My site 3 years ago

I set up adsense on my site, www.sunnypad.com, in August, I think. I’m getting closer to my first $100 check that will come in. Google just sent me a PIN number on a post card last month. I guess they wanted to check my address and all since it’s getting close?

I haven’t spent any time really on this since then, but I figured since I was making a little, maybe I could make a lot more if I tried.

I’m not going to have much time to work on this in the next couple of weeks; I have a contracting project I’m working on that will make me a little actual money today :D but after that gets cleared I’d like to concentrate on this goal.



Increasing Your Blog Readership: Lots of Short Entries? 4 years ago

Increasing Your Blog Readership: Lots of Short Entries?
by Joey deVilla at 04:08PM (EDT) on June 13, 2005 | Permanent Link
Tristan Louis has been looking at the “A-List” of bloggers: those people with blogs who get the largest readerships, in order to determine what made them so. In analyzing some of the most popular blogs - BoingBoing, Instapundit, Engadget and Daily Kos - and one thing that many of them have in common is that they post short entries several times a day.

Posting often works because there’s a strong correlation between frequent posting and repeat visits. The short-entry format works well for blogs that are “linkers”: blogs that consistently point out interesting things online and link to them before most people have even heard of them. These blogs tend to function as news services for people who like to keep up with interesting developments. If you’re new to blogging and are looking to build your readership, the short-format/post-often approach is the easiest way to do so.
by Joey deVilla at 04:08PM (EDT) on June 13, 2005 | Permanent Link
Tristan Louis has been looking at the “A-List” of bloggers: those people with blogs who get the largest readerships, in order to determine what made them so. In analyzing some of the most popular blogs - BoingBoing, Instapundit, Engadget and Daily Kos - and one thing that many of them have in common is that they post short entries several times a day.

Posting often works because there’s a strong correlation between frequent posting and repeat visits. The short-entry format works well for blogs that are “linkers”: blogs that consistently point out interesting things online and link to them before most people have even heard of them. These blogs tend to function as news services for people who like to keep up with interesting developments. If you’re new to blogging and are looking to build your readership, the short-format/post-often approach is the easiest way to do so.



A site I found on this topic... 4 years ago

http://www.problogger.net/



Stargazer has gotten 2 cheers on this goal.

 

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